Victoria Azarenka is a Belarusian professional tennis player who competes on the WTA Tour, currently ranked world No. 132. She competes as a right-handed player. She has reached a career-high of No. 1. She turned professional in 2003.
Victoria Azarenka faced difficulties in 2025. Competing on hard: 6-7. She showed mental strength converting 49% of breakpoints, capitalized at 57% on second serve returns, and won 45% of pressure points when returning.
Azarenka reached semifinals at Miami, Berlin, and Brisbane plus quarterfinals at Doha, Rome, Charleston, and Washington in 2024. Azarenka dominated on hard with a 20-10 record. She went 7-4 on clay. She dominated second serve returns at 60%, held firm saving 60% of breakpoints faced, and stayed composed winning at 59% in pressure situations on serve.
Victoria Azarenka's 2023 season featured a semifinal at Australian Open plus quarterfinals at Adelaide 1 and Guadalajara. Competing on hard: 17-13. She punished rival's second serves winning 58%, thrived in clutch moments at 59% on serve pressure points, and won a strong 67% behind the first serve.
Victoria Azarenka advanced to a semifinal at Guadalajara 2 plus quarterfinals at Adelaide 1 and Washington during 2022. Hard results: 18-10. Azarenka created massive pressure with 58% on second returns, challenged servers with 40% on first return, and held steady at 66% on first serve points.
Azarenka reached the final at Indian Wells, advancing to a semifinal at Berlin and two quarterfinals, including Montreal in 2021. Competing on hard: 18-6. She neutralized opponents winning 40% on first serve return, dominated second serve returns at 63%, and showed mental strength converting 50% of breakpoints.
The Belarusian's 2020 season featured the US Open final, also reaching the final at Ostrava, reaching a semifinal at Cincinnati along with one quarterfinal at Rome. Hard results: 14-3. She controlled serve with just 0.26 double faults per game, showed resilience saving 60% breakpoints when threatened, and created massive pressure with 62% on second returns.
Victoria Azarenka advanced to the final at Monterrey and three quarterfinals, including Rome during 2019. Competing on clay: 7-4. On hard: 11-11. She collected 5 wins against top-20 opponents. Azarenka created massive pressure with 60% on second returns, managed 38% success during first serve return, and contributed 0.3 aces per game.
Azarenka reached a semifinal at Miami plus quarterfinals at Tokyo and San Jose in 2018. Hard results: 14-7. She collected 4 wins against top-20 opponents. She dominated second serve returns at 58%, put immediate pressure winning 39% against first serves, and executed at 47% on break chances.
The 2017 campaign saw the Belarusian finish 3-2.
In 2016, Victoria Azarenka triumphed with three titles, winning Miami, Brisbane, and Indian Wells. Hard results: 21-1. Azarenka dominated on first serve with 72% points won, broke down first serves at 41% clip, and created massive pressure with 67% on second returns.
Victoria Azarenka reached the final at Doha and three quarterfinals, including US Open and Wimbledon in 2015. On clay: a strong 7-3. On hard: 18-9. Azarenka held firm saving 62% of breakpoints faced, executed at 52% on break chances, and neutralized opponents winning 40% on first serve return.
A tough 2014 season for Azarenka. Hard results: 13-7. She capitalized at 58% on second serve returns, held steady at 65% on first serve points, and saved 57% of breakpoints faced.
Victoria Azarenka captured three titles in 2013, winning Doha, Cincinnati, and Australian Open. Azarenka also reached finals at Rome, US Open, and Carlsbad and one semifinal at Roland Garros. On hard: a strong 32-6. On clay: 10-3. She broke down first serves at 44% clip, created massive pressure with 65% on second returns, and executed at 52% on break chances.
In 2012, Victoria Azarenka triumphed with six titles, winning Doha, Linz, Sydney, Beijing, Indian Wells, and Australian Open. The Belarusian also reached finals at Madrid, US Open, and Stuttgart and three semifinals, including Wimbledon. She reached world No. 1 for the first time. Azarenka dominated on hard with a 45-5 record. She went 8-2 on grass. Competing on clay: 11-3. She saved as much as 60% of breakpoints faced, excelled with 67% success on first serve, and put immediate pressure winning 42% against first serves.
Azarenka captured three titles in 2011, winning Miami, Marbella, and Luxembourg. The Belarusian also reached finals at Madrid and WTA Championships and three semifinals, including Wimbledon and Toronto. She reached a new career-high of No. 3. On clay: a strong 16-4. On hard: 32-11. She broke down first serves at 42% clip, created massive pressure with 60% on second returns, and defended brilliantly at 57% break points saved.
In 2010, the Belarusian triumphed with two titles, winning Moscow and Stanford. Victoria Azarenka also reached finals at Dubai and Eastbourne and three semifinals, including Montreal. She dominated on hard with a 32-12 record. Clay proved challenging: 4-6. She showed mental strength converting 53% of breakpoints, defended brilliantly at 59% break points saved, and dominated on first serve with 65% points won.
Victoria Azarenka captured three titles in 2009, winning Miami, Memphis, and Brisbane. Azarenka also reached one semifinal at Rome. She broke into the top 10 for the first time. On hard: a strong 32-9. On clay: 9-4. She broke down first serves at 42% clip, created massive pressure with 62% on second returns, and executed at 54% on break chances.
Azarenka's 2008 season featured finals at Prague and Gold Coast, also reaching semifinals at Berlin, Montreal, and Stuttgart plus two quarterfinals. She dominated on clay with a 15-6 record. Azarenka went 22-11 on hard. She won 40% on first serve return, won 61% on second serve return, and converted 50% of break chances.
The Belarusian advanced to finals at Estoril and Tashkent, also reaching semifinals at Prague and Indian Wells plus three quarterfinals during 2007. She entered the top 20 for the first time. On hard: a strong 21-10. On clay: 7-4. She won 41% on first serve return, won 58% on second serve return, and converted 46% of break chances.
Victoria Azarenka reached a semifinal at Tashkent in 2006. Hard results: 9-7. She collected 2 wins against top-20 opponents. She won 40% on first serve return and converted 47% of break chances.
2005 proved to be a breakthrough season for Victoria Azarenka. A maiden top-200 ranking followed. She captured one title at Petange 50K. She also reached the final at Augusta GA 25K. Additional semifinals at Tenerife 25K and Tunica Resorts MS 25K. Record: 17-5. Competing on hard: 9-4.
Victoria Azarenka gained ranking points at Futures level in 2004. She reached the semifinal at Darmstadt 25K. Season record: 8-5. Results on clay: 6-4.